This CLE webinar will provide knowledge to elder care attorneys on representing clients facing end-of-life and incapacity healthcare and financial decision-making issues. The panel will discuss the pros, cons and pitfalls of advanced directives, power of attorney, guardianships, and POLSTs. The program will close with a discussion of controversial topics in healthcare decision-making such as voluntarily stopping eating & drinking (VSED) and physician-assisted suicide.

Description

Incapacity and end-of-life planning are among the most critical tasks performed by elder care attorneys to help elderly or disabled clients and their families. Elder care attorneys must address the medical and business/financial needs of disabled, sick or dying clients. Attorneys should develop a plan that includes Advance Directives and similar documents regarding healthcare decisions for incapacitated patients and end-of-life decisions.

Elder care attorneys should be able to draft Durable Financial Powers of Attorney and know how and when to expand or limit the scope of such documents to meet a client’s goals. When necessary, an elder care attorney should know how to pursue guardianship and/or conservatorship for an incapacitated adult if there are no incapacity planning documents in place or if these documents are not sufficient to protect this person from physical or financial harm.

In addition to the Advance Directive or Healthcare POA and Living Will documents, several states use an advance care planning form known as POLST (Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment) or MOLST (Medical Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment) which have the same authority as any other medical order. A 2016 Georgia Supreme Court decision held that health care providers were not immune from liability under when the provider failed to heed a patient’s medical directive and ignored directions from the Health Care Agent.

Another controversial topic in healthcare decision-making is the legality of VSED, and who can enforce the wishes of a patient who has stated a preference for VSED. A 2016 Oregon court ruled that Oregon law required an Alzheimer's patient be spoon-fed despite an advance directive against “artificial nutrition” and hydration. The court ruled that the directive did not specify refusal to be spoon-fed.

Listen as our panel of elder care attorneys provides knowledge on representing clients facing incapacity and end-of-life care issues. The panel will review how to develop an effective long-term care plan for clients by using Advance Directives for Health Care, Durable Financial Powers of Attorney, and discuss the last resorts of guardianship and conservatorship. Panelists will also discuss how state legislatures and courts are addressing controversial health-care decision making, including VSED and physician-assisted suicide.

Faculty

Mr. Black focuses his practice on counseling clients on elder law issues, including Medicaid & Veterans Benefits...
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Mr. Black focuses his practice on counseling clients on elder law issues, including Medicaid & Veterans Benefits eligibility issues, guardianships, conservatorships. He also concentrates on estate planning and administration, and special needs planning.

Ms. Vantrease assists older clients, their children and other family members, with Nursing Home, Medicaid,...
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Ms. Vantrease assists older clients, their children and other family members, with Nursing Home, Medicaid, asset preservation, asset distribution, mental capacity, probate, Guardianship and other issues, both financial and non-financial. In addition, she drafts legal documents such as Wills, Powers of Attorney, Living Wills, Health Care Surrogates, and Care Agreements for clients and family members. She also speaks and teaches in a variety of forums.

Other Formats
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Strafford will process CLE credit for one person on
each recording. All formats include program handouts. To find out which
recorded format will provide the best CLE option, select your state:

CLE On-Demand Video

CLE On-Demand Webinars are available 48 hours following the live program
and include video streaming of the full program plus handouts. They are
accessible 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. You can listen to the entire
program in one sitting or take a break and return to the place where you
left off. Strafford offers one-year of continuous access to every on-demand
program you purchase.

$197

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